Search results for "Electron deficiency"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

Oxygenation of Alkane C−H Bonds with Methyl(trifluoromethyl)dioxirane:  Effect of the Substituents and the Solvent on the Reaction Rate

2005

[Chemical reaction: See text] The mechanism of the oxygenation of alkane C-H bonds with methyl(trifluoromethyl)dioxirane (1a) is studied through the effect of the substituent and solvent on the rate of oxygenation of 2-substituted adamantanes (2). The results suggest a remarkable electron deficiency at the reacting carbon atom in the transition state leading to the regular oxygenation products. The linearity of the Hammett plot reveals that the reaction mechanism does not change within a range of 0.15-0.67 units of sigma(I). A change in the solvent does not affect the distribution of the products, indicating a through-bond transmission of the substituent effect as the origin of the deactiva…

Reaction mechanismTrifluoromethylOrganic ChemistrySubstituentGeneral MedicineElectron deficiencyPhotochemistryMedicinal chemistryChemical reactionReaction ratechemistry.chemical_compoundHammett equationchemistryDioxiraneSolvent effectsThe Journal of Organic Chemistry
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Synthesis, structure and reaction chemistry of a nucleophilic aluminyl anion.

2018

The reactivity of aluminium compounds is dominated by their electron deficiency and consequent electrophilicity; these compounds are archetypal Lewis acids (electron-pair acceptors). The main industrial roles of aluminium, and classical methods of synthesizing aluminium–element bonds (for example, hydroalumination and metathesis), draw on the electron deficiency of species of the type AlR3 and AlCl31,2. Whereas aluminates, [AlR4]−, are well known, the idea of reversing polarity and using an aluminium reagent as the nucleophilic partner in bond-forming substitution reactions is unprecedented, owing to the fact that low-valent aluminium anions analogous to nitrogen-, carbon- and boron-centred…

Substitution reactionkemiallinen synteesiMultidisciplinaryanionit010405 organic chemistryaluminiumNacNacElectron deficiencyorganometalliyhdisteet010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesOxidative additionMedicinal chemistry0104 chemical scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundNucleophilechemistryElectrophileorganometallic compoundsReactivity (chemistry)Lewis acids and basesalumiinianionschemical synthesisNature
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Exploring new activating groups for reactive cysteine NCAs

2016

Abstract Due to its ability to reversibly crosslink proteins, cysteine has a unique role as an amino acid in nature. For controlled, asymmetric formation of disulfides from two thiols, one thiol needs to be activated. While few activating groups for cysteine have been proposed, they are usually not stable against amines making them unsuitable for solid phase peptide synthesis or amine initiated polymerization of α-amino acid-N-carboxy-anhydrides (NCAs). In this Letter we describe a series of new thiol activated cysteines, as well as their NCAs and explore the link between electron deficiency of the leaving group and control over NCA polymerization.

chemistry.chemical_classificationOrganic ChemistryLeaving group02 engineering and technologyElectron deficiency010402 general chemistry021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology01 natural sciencesBiochemistryCombinatorial chemistry0104 chemical sciencesAmino acidchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryPolymerizationDrug DiscoveryThiolPeptide synthesisOrganic chemistryAmine gas treating0210 nano-technologyCysteineTetrahedron Letters
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Why do Electron-Deficient Dienes React Rapidly in Diels?Alder Reactions with Electron-Deficient Ethylenes? A Density Functional Theory Analysis

2004

The Diels−Alder reaction of the electron-deficient (ED) dimethyl 2,3-dimethylenesuccinate with two electron-rich (ER) and two ED ethylenes has been studied at the B3LYP/6-31G* level of theory. The analysis of the geometry and electronic structure of the transition state of the reaction with the ED dimethyl 2-methylenemalonate along with the analysis of the global and local electrophilicity indices of the reagents provide an explanation of the participation of this ED diene as nucleophile against powerful electrophiles in polar Diels−Alder reactions. (© Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, 69451 Weinheim, Germany, 2004)

chemistry.chemical_compoundReaction mechanismDieneNucleophileChemistryElectrophilic additionComputational chemistryOrganic ChemistryElectrophileDensity functional theoryPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryElectron deficiencyCycloadditionEuropean Journal of Organic Chemistry
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